Monday, January 14, 2008

More power cuts on the cards

(Fin24) - Power cuts resumed on Monday and would continue nationally for the rest of the week, Eskom said.


Eskom's media desk said some areas might experience power cuts up to twice a day, for up to two and a half hours at a time.


Eskom needed to reduce demand for electricity in order to stabilise the electricity system nationally, the power utility's statement said.


Power cuts resumed on Saturday after Eskom experienced technical difficulties at generating units, coupled with a low reserve margin.


The utility called on all consumers to use electricity sparingly to reduce the number of power cuts.
Read more at Fin24

Diamond Core BRC merger okayed

(Fin24) - The proposed merger of Northern Cape diamond explorer Diamond Core Resources (DMR) and BRC Diamond
Corporation, a Canadian diamond exploration company, looks set to go ahead after Diamond Core secured shareholder approval for the transaction today.


The merger will create a company with a combined value of $200m, which will make it the fifth-largest diamond junior mining company in Africa.


Diamond Core said in a statement to the JSE that shareholders
representing 99.52% of the total number of votes voted in favour of the merger.


The proposed merger, which will be done by way of a court-sanctioned scheme of arrangement, was first announced in July last year.


 

Platinum miners soar on JSE

(Fin24) - A record platinum price hit on Monday underpinned a robust performance among platinum mining stocks on the JSE, giving the bourse an extra boost and helping it close 1.61% higher.


By the end of trade, the platinum mining index had advanced 6.97%, and resources collected 2.28%. The gold mining index was only a mere 0.09% in the black though. Banks and financials gained 1.84% and 1.44% respectively, and
industrials recovered 0.85%.


The rand was bid at R6.74 to the dollar from R6.79 when the JSE closed on Friday, while gold was quoted at $902.50 a troy ounce from $891.45/oz at the JSE's last close.


During the day, gold hit a record high of $914.40/oz, while platinum reached new highs of $1,590/oz.


"The JSE is up, but off its best levels. It has been quite an ironic day where the gold price hit an all time high, but there was a fluctuation in gold shares with a disappointing performance by gold shares relative to the huge gain in the gold price," said a Johannesburg-based equities trader.


He added that platinum shares "just exploded" as a result of the new record platinum price, and gains in heavyweights like Anglo American and BHP Billiton lifted the JSE higher.
 

Back in the swing of things

(Fin24) - The festive season has come to an end and it's back to business as usual in the South African corporate world.


For starters, four JSE-listed companies and one AltX-listed company are holding their annual general meetings (AGMs) this week.


JSE-listed financial services company AfroCentric Investment Corporation formerly known as WB Holdings, had mixed results in 2007 as far as its share price was concerned. The share price rose to a high of 445c in April but went down to 220c in August and September after opening the year around 325c. The share price has since recovered and is currently trading around the 275c mark. The recovery should please the directors and the shareholders alike.


At the beginning of the year, Petmin's share price slumped to 390c and according to Numis Securities, the company was ripe for the picking. This is despite an acquisition spree which included a 25% stake in Kermas Group and a 75% stake in the Veremo project in late November. However, the slump hasn't discouraged the directors from anticipating a strong growth for the company until 2012. 


Diversified mid-tier mining group Metorex has been very active of late and its offer to Copper Resources Corporation (CRC) has hogged the business headlines in the first week of the new year.


With nothing concluded on the proposed deal thus far, the offer has again been extended, this time to January 18. The AGM on Wednesday gives shareholders a perfect platform to pose questions they might have on the deal.


Property loan-stock company Redefine Income Fund has had a good run so far and this should boost shareholders' confidence for the year ahead. With Redefine's distributions increasing by 20% late in 2007, the company has outperformed the sector.
 

Rand remains on front foot

(Fin24) - The South African rand remained on the front foot in late trade on Monday on the back of a surging bullion price and a weaker dollar which is being hit by fears over 4Q US bank earnings this week that could show even larger-than-anticipated losses because of subprime exposure.


By 15:55 the rand was bid at R6.7270 to the dollar from its previous close of R6.7400. It was bid at R10.0318 to the euro from a previous R9.9834 and at R13.1909 against sterling from R13.2024 before.


The euro was bid at $1.4884 from $1.4806 overnight, while gold was quoted at $906.80 a troy ounce from its previous close of $897.20/oz.


Gold rose to a fresh all-time high of $914.40 an ounce on Monday following ongoing bullish momentum from a weakening US dollar and concerns over the gloomy outlook for the US economy, traders said.


Meanwhile, Dow Jones reports that fears that fourth-quarter earnings from major US banks will show even greater than anticipated losses were helping to drive the dollar lower in Europe Monday.


The rise in risk aversion is helping to push the yen higher across the board, while the euro is still pushing ahead on the assumption that the European Central Bank will remain hawkish, even in the face of weaker euro- zone data.


The tone for the dollar was initially set by US Federal Reserve chairperson Ben Bernanke late last week when he made it clear that the Fed is willing to cut interest rates by as much as 50 basis points at the end of this month.


New data this week, including retail sales and producer prices, are expected to reinforce this view, with some analysts suggesting that the Fed may even cut rates before the scheduled open market committee meeting January 30.

Read more at Fin24

Regulators reviewing pre-M&A trades: report

(Reuters) - Securities regulators are reviewing whether investment banks' trades in shares of companies linked to M&A deals they were advising were based on coincidence or inside information, according to The Wall Street Journal on Monday.

Investment banks must keep their trading and merger advisory businesses separate, although one arm of a bank could buy shares in a company without knowing that another arm is advising on a deal involving that firm.

The report quoted Stephen Luparello, a top official at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), as saying the issue was "definitely on our radar screen". FINRA is the largest non-governmental regulator of the U.S. securities industry.

Its interest stemmed from an academic study which found such trading happens more often than would be expected by chance, the report said.

The Wall Street Journal said it had reviewed stock ownership and deal records and found dozens of cases in which investment banks appeared to buy shares in companies that were targets of acquisitions by firms they were advising.
 

Gold, Platinum Rise to Record on Declining Dollar; Silver Gains

(Bloomberg) -- Gold and platinum rose to records and silver extended its rally to the highest in 27 years as a declining dollar increased demand for precious metals as alternatives to stocks and bonds.

The dollar fell as traders increased bets that the Federal Reserve will lower U.S. interest rates to avoid a recession. Gold has gained 9 percent this year and the dollar has fallen more than 2 percent against the euro, to a seven-week low.

``We're in a falling rate environment. I think that works in gold's favor,'' Richard Urwin, London-based head of asset allocation at BlackRock Investment Management, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. ``We're probably in an environment in which on average the dollar is going to depreciate. Gold is a good hedge against it.''

The metal for immediate delivery rose $12.31, or 1.4 percent, to $907.71 an ounce at 1:38 p.m. in London. It earlier reached $914.30.

Gold futures for February delivery rose $11.60, or 1.3 percent, to $909.30 an ounce at 8:38 a.m. on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The price earlier reached $915.90, the highest ever for a most-active contract.

Twenty-three of 29 traders, investors and analysts surveyed by Bloomberg from Mumbai to New York on Jan. 10 and Jan. 11 advised buying gold this week. Five said sell, and one was neutral.

``The market is still extremely bullish,'' said James Moore, an analyst at TheBullionDesk.com in London. ``With the U.S. potentially cutting interest rates while those in Europe stay firm, the dollar looks set to add additional upside momentum.''

Gold Bets

Hedge-fund managers and other large speculators increased bets on higher New York gold futures, to a record net 205,404 contracts on the Comex as of Jan. 8, figures from the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission on Jan. 11 showed. Net long positions were up from 199,438 contracts from a week earlier.

Fed funds futures contracts on the Chicago Board of Trade show 100 percent odds the Fed will cut its 4.25 percent target rate for overnight bank loans to 3.75 percent at its Jan. 30 meeting. The odds have risen from 66 percent a week ago.

Demand for gold will be less affected by a global slowdown than silver, platinum and palladium, said Walter de Wet, head of commodity research in Johannesburg at Standard Bank Group Ltd., Africa's largest lender.

Industrial uses for gold, such as dentistry and electronics, made up 15 percent of total demand in 2006 compared with more than 50 percent for platinum and 47 percent for silver, according to estimates by London-based research company GFMS Ltd. Jewelry accounts for almost 60 percent of gold consumption.

ETF Gold

``The investment component of demand for all of these precious metals is dominating,'' De Wet said. ``We're likely to see an increase in all of these metals but gold is probably going to outpace.'' The gains may last until the second half of this year, he said.

Assets in the StreetTracks Gold Trust, the world's biggest exchange-traded fund backed by gold, are up 2.2 percent this year at a record 641.81 metric tons.

Gold also gained as equities declined. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index has fallen for three weeks, losing 4.6 percent, the worst start since 1982, according to Bloomberg data.

``People are looking at precious metals as principally a safe haven while they ride out a correction in equity markets,'' Peter McGuire, managing director at Commodity Warrants Australia Ltd., said by telephone from Sydney today.

The euro traded as high as $1.4915 today. It reached a record $1.4967 on Nov. 23.

Gold has had a correlation of 0.71 against the euro-dollar exchange rate in the past three months, compared with 0.67 in the previous three months. A reading of 1 would mean the two moved in lockstep.
 

U.S. Stock Futures Rise on IBM Profit, Rate-Cut Speculation

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. stock-index futures rallied after International Business Machines Corp.'s profit topped analysts' estimates and investors bet on larger interest-rate cuts by the Federal Reserve.

IBM, the world's biggest computer-services provider, rose on results that were boosted by international growth. Apple Inc. climbed after Bank of America Corp. increased its earnings forecast for the maker of the iPod media player. Barrick Gold Corp. and Newmont Mining Corp. advanced as gold reached a record.

The gains today signaled that the market may rebound from the worst start for a year since 1982. Standard & Poor's 500 Index futures expiring in March added 10 to 1,417.8 as of 9:16 a.m. in New York. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures rose 111 to 12,772 and Nasdaq 100 Index futures increased 24.75 to 1,950.25.

``One of the driving forces behind weakness in the markets had been the theory corporate earnings would be squeezed with the global slowdown,'' said Tim Smalls, head of U.S. trading at Execution LLC in Greenwich, Connecticut. ``IBM telling you they're doing well is going to take a little bit of the pressure off.''

U.S. stocks were poised to rebound from the worst start for a year since 1982 as Fed fund futures showed traders see a 44 percent probability the central bank will lower its benchmark interest rate by 0.75 percentage point to boost economic growth at its Jan. 30 meeting. Before Jan. 11, traders saw no chance of a three-quarter point cut.